Meter per Second to Kilometer per Hour
m/s
km/h
Conversion History
| Conversion | Reuse | Delete |
|---|---|---|
1 m/s (Meter per Second) → 3.6 km/h (Kilometer per Hour) Just now |
Quick Reference Table (Meter per Second to Kilometer per Hour)
| Meter per Second (m/s) | Kilometer per Hour (km/h) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 3.6 |
| 5 | 18 |
| 10 | 36 |
| 30 | 108 |
| 50 | 180 |
| 100 | 360 |
| 300 | 1,080 |
About Meter per Second (m/s)
The meter per second (m/s) is the SI base unit of speed, expressing how many meters an object travels in one second. It is the standard unit in physics, engineering, and scientific contexts. Most everyday speeds feel small in m/s — a brisk walk is about 1.4 m/s, a bicycle around 5–7 m/s, a car on a motorway around 30 m/s. The unit scales cleanly through SI prefixes and converts directly to other metric speed units: 1 m/s = 3.6 km/h. Wind speed in meteorology is often reported in m/s in scientific literature.
A sprinter running 100 m in 10 seconds averages 10 m/s. A gentle walking pace is about 1.4 m/s.
About Kilometer per Hour (km/h)
The kilometer per hour (km/h) is the most widely used everyday unit of speed globally, appearing on road signs, vehicle speedometers, and weather reports in most metric countries. It expresses how many kilometers an object travels in one hour. Typical car speeds range from 50 km/h in urban areas to 130 km/h on motorways. Commercial aircraft cruise at 800–900 km/h. The conversion to m/s is straightforward: divide by 3.6. The unit is intuitive for distances most people encounter daily — a 60 km/h speed limit means covering a kilometer roughly every minute.
Urban speed limits are typically 50 km/h. Motorway limits are commonly 100–130 km/h. A cyclist averages 15–25 km/h.
Meter per Second – Frequently Asked Questions
How do you convert m/s to km/h?
Multiply by 3.6. The conversion comes from the unit chain: 1 m/s × 3,600 s/hr ÷ 1,000 m/km = 3.6 km/h. So 10 m/s is 36 km/h, and the motorway limit of 130 km/h is about 36.1 m/s. The factor 3.6 is one of the most useful quick conversions in physics.
What is the speed of sound in m/s?
Sound travels at about 343 m/s in dry air at 20°C. This varies with temperature — roughly 0.6 m/s per degree Celsius. In water, sound travels about 1,480 m/s; in steel, around 5,100 m/s. The Mach number expresses speed as a multiple of the local speed of sound.
How fast do Olympic sprinters run in m/s?
Usain Bolt's world record 100 m sprint averaged 10.44 m/s. His peak speed during the race was approximately 12.4 m/s (44.7 km/h), reached around the 60–80 m mark. For comparison, a greyhound runs at about 17 m/s and a cheetah peaks at 33 m/s.
Why do scientists use m/s instead of km/h?
The SI system requires a coherent base unit for all physics calculations. Using m/s keeps equations consistent — kinetic energy (½mv²), force (ma), and pressure (N/m²) all resolve cleanly in SI. Converting to km/h mid-calculation introduces factors of 3.6 that propagate through formulas and cause errors.
What is a fast wind speed in m/s?
The Beaufort scale defines gale force at 17–20 m/s (62–72 km/h). Hurricane-force begins at 33 m/s (119 km/h). The strongest surface wind ever recorded was 113 m/s (408 km/h) during Tropical Cyclone Olivia in 1996 on Barrow Island, Australia.
Kilometer per Hour – Frequently Asked Questions
Which countries use km/h and which use mph for road speeds?
Most of the world uses km/h, including all of the EU, Australia, Canada, China, and India. The United States, Myanmar, and Liberia are the primary countries still using miles per hour for road signs. The UK is a notable exception — it uses mph on roads despite being otherwise metric in daily life, a situation that has persisted since the 1970s metrication program stalled.
How fast do commercial planes fly in km/h?
Typical commercial jets (Boeing 737, Airbus A320) cruise at 800–900 km/h at altitude, roughly Mach 0.78–0.85. The Concorde flew at 2,179 km/h (Mach 2.04). Airspeed is officially measured in knots (1 knot ≈ 1.852 km/h), so flight data systems show 432–485 knots, not km/h, even in metric countries.
What is the fastest speed ever achieved by a car in km/h?
The land speed record is 1,227.985 km/h (763.035 mph), set by Andy Green in the jet-powered ThrustSSC in 1997 in the Black Rock Desert, Nevada — breaking the sound barrier on land. The fastest production car is the SSC Tuatara, which achieved 455 km/h in 2020. Most track supercars top out around 320–350 km/h.
What is the fastest animal on Earth in km/h?
The peregrine falcon holds the overall record at roughly 390 km/h in a hunting dive (stoop). On land, the cheetah tops out at about 112 km/h in short bursts. The black marlin is the fastest fish at approximately 130 km/h. Among insects, the Australian tiger beetle runs at 9 km/h — slow-sounding until you realize that, for its body size, it is moving so fast its eyes cannot keep up and it has to stop repeatedly to re-locate prey.
How do weather services report wind speed — km/h or m/s?
It depends on the country. The UK Met Office and Australian BOM use km/h for public forecasts. European services often use km/h or m/s depending on audience — scientific literature uses m/s. In the US, wind speed is given in mph or knots. The World Meteorological Organization uses m/s as the standard for international data exchange.